Anyone happen to have a codesniffer standard i can clone from somewhere that beats you over the head to use mbstring functions? There are some bad habits I still have yet to break completely.
@NikiC the thing is, when using them I am not interested in what they are. I'd like to get their length, and if we treat them as collections of chars then implementing countable is the way to get the length of a string.
But talking to you today was a pleasure, and I have a clear understanding that I won't touch anything even remotely related to PHP for the next how-many-I-can years, and that my bashing is absolutely based.
@BartekBanachewicz I think it's a rather complicated question. Treating strings as char arrays makes sense in C++, because that's what they actually are there, but in PHP I suspect it would cause more confusion than simplify things.
@NikiC I'd argue that treating them as a collection of chars makes sense when you bring encoding into the picture. You can always get an array dump of raw bytes.
@DanLugg It would make sense for some specific cases, but would more likely just cause bugs when people accidentally iterate over a string instead of getting an error
if you want to traverse bytes, foreach (str_split($str)) will do
If such an important and basic feature can be so, pardon me, dysfunctional when it comes to one of the most basic data types, then I can only expect worse when getting into more complicated features.
When someone has a conclusion already decided upon and only looks for evidence that supports it - I don't think they care much about what's "scientific."
@BartekBanachewicz strlen(). Tool for job. String model is different, and yeh it has some pretty weird idiosyncrasies, but it does work. It just works in a different way.
@BartekBanachewicz Because in PHP strings are not really collections, they are scalars, with an incomplete abstraction that allows you to partially treat them as collections - but if you want them to behave as a collection, use a structure that actually is a collection - there are enough utilities available to let you do this
@BartekBanachewicz Because they are scalars. They just happen to have a few abstractions that betray the underlying char * which, for the record, most people actually never use. One thing that you have to remember is that it doesn't make sense for high level web-centric languages to treat strings in the same way as low level languages, because strings are fucking complicated (see C) and web development is basically nothing but incredibly verbose string manipulation.
@DaveRandom yeah, but that's my point exactly! Because of how important that string manipulation is, limiting it because of internal implementation seems... silly.
@webarto you can simply learn another language. Ever thought about that?
I don't have time and need at the moment. I do wish. It would probably take a year to get to know other language and someone gotta support wife, kid, mistress and Porsche.
@webarto the more languages you know, the easier is to learn the next one. I don't know (I don't remember! :)) how hard it's to learn the second language. Learning twenty-second certainly takes less than a year though
@DaveRandom I don't get why it's different, though. There's no problem in making strings proper collections and allowing string-specific mechanics. At least none that I know of, assuming you properly abstract the low-level details.
@BartekBanachewicz I know Ruby a bit (can't type it), and from what I've seen, it has probably more 1337 syntax, and is more saner in parts than PHP, but still I see no benefit in using it exclusively, PHP is more fun.
@DanLugg What you're basically saying is that the language sucks but you're still using it because you're too lazy to kill it and switch to something else / legacy. Did I understand it right?
@BartekBanachewicz what @DanLugg said. PHP is full of horrible, weird, leaky abstractions. But we do know that and are doing something about it - it's not a quick process though (otherwise you end up with Python 3/perl 6 scenarios)
But TBH if I were forced to write PHP just for the money... I wouldn't be passionate enough about my job to do it properly. I'd rather work at Starbucks, I think (I love coffee).
But that does take time, and we've all probably been exactly where you're standing now, on this topic; though maybe with less experience in other languages (which is why we were naive enough to stay)
@DanLugg Terrible is subjective, and to be honest, knowing this handful of languages I do more or less fluently, the only language that I'd say is worse is C.
@derp I think it's really better than PHP. It's certainly more modern, it's more performant, and has the APIs to everything nowadays. And npm is great.
@BartekBanachewicz Not when you work for a Microsoft licensed shop. If I hated C# enough to use VB (which I'd hate because I do) then I'd have to get a new job.
@BartekBanachewicz Yea, and the rest of us in the real world can't just get to tell our bosses that time-to-market doesn't matter while we learn new <insert-language-of-the-month-here>
@BartekBanachewicz Well, there's assembly interop, and then there's communication with co-workers. If I hate C#, I probably don't want to work with C# devs on either side of me when we're all staring at parts of the same project.
@BartekBanachewicz Well, my point is that most any language, that you despise; chances are you don't want to work in a shop that deals exclusively in that.
And I also agree that if you have 2-3 people that know PHP and you need a website built the last thing you want to do is say "Let's swap to Ruby guys!"
If you can't write reasonably maintainable code in PHP why in the world would I expect you to start doing so just because you're using Ruby/C#/Whatever?
If I have a room full of Ruby devs, I'm not going to force them to write PHP, likewise of the inverse. More importantly, I'd be a bit scared as a PM if I knew they were going to attempt that.
Language arguments are just goddamn silly. Everything you're trying to do has parameters that you're trying to fit together as best you can. From the schedule to the budget to the available tools and packages to the skillsets of the existing team, and so on. If you're going to hold that all up to throw a fit over a language, grow up.
@DanLugg point being there's a lot of crappy code being written in PHP and it's not being chosen for the company making top-quality software that often